Home > Kathleen Parker: I'm 'Slightly to the Right of Center;' Fan of Obama

Kathleen Parker: I'm 'Slightly to the Right of Center;' Fan of Obama

By

Matthew Balan

October 4, 2010 - 4:50pm

On
Thursday's Larry King Live, future anchor Kathleen Parker verified her
tenuous conservative credentials, as she identified herself as a "conservative," but added, "a pox on everybody's house, as far as I'm concerned." She later confessed that she "would put myself...slightly to the right of center," and that she was "a big fan of Barack Obama as he came into office...I didn't want him to fail."

Anchor Larry King brought on Parker and future co-host Eliot Spitzer
of "Client Number Nine" fame during the first half of the 9 pm Eastern
hour. Three minutes in, King asked about the format of the show, which
begins on October 4. After the two briefly described it, the columnist
stated that "Eliot is identified as a Democrat and I'm identified as a
conservative." Spitzer replied, "Well, you said Democrat/conservative, not Republican," and the resulting exchange led to Parker revealing how she saw her position politically.

PARKER: Eliot is identified as a Democrat and I'm identified as a conservative, I want to reiterate what he said. We are both-

SPITZER: Well, you said Democrat/conservative, not Republican (unintelligible)- I mean-

PARKER: Well, I'm trying to be honest here.

SPITZER: But you know (laughs)-

PARKER: I'm not actually a registered Republican. I'm probably going to get fired for saying that. But in any case-

SPITZER: Too smart to be that- I understand it. I appreciate that.

PARKER: You know, a pox on everybody's house, as far as I'm concerned.

Twelve minutes later, King raised the issue of President Obama and
how many on the left are frustrated with him. He turned to Parker for
her take: "Many liberals are disappointed with this administration. How
do you feel about him? If they're disappointed, it means he's more to the center, isn't he? So you should be happier with him, by that reasoning?"

The pseudo-conservative columnist didn't disappoint with her answer, hinting her disapproval at Rush Limbaugh's vehement opposition to Obama[3].
Spitzer even got a word in, defending the President, while hinting that
Mr. Obama possibly wasn't liberal enough on one key issue:

KING: As a conservative- liberals, as you know- many liberals are disappointed with this administration.

PARKER: Yeah, so I hear.

KING: How do you feel about him? If they're disappointed, it means
he's more to the center, isn't he? So you should be happier with him-

PARKER: Well-
KING: By that reasoning?

PARKER: I think everybody's disappointed with him for different
reasons, and I would put myself more in this great big center, but
slightly to the right of center. But I was a- I'm a big fan of Barack
Obama as he came into office, and was not one of those Republicans who
wanted him to do badly. I didn't want him to fail.

KING: That was-

PARKER: I do think he made a big mistake, though, by tackling these
massive policy overhauls, at a time when we were very vulnerable
economically, and I think that's obvious now. We've- you know, looking
back, it's pretty easy to see that he should have gone after the economy
and jobs, rather than health care.

KING: (to Spitzer) Has he disappointed you?

SPITZER: In certain respects- look, having been in an executive
position, I can tell you, it is unbelievably difficult when the world-
problems around your plate. He's doing a remarkable job tackling them one by one,
and what we should remember- Franklin Roosevelt, two years into his
administration, the same place politically. Ronald Reagan, the same
place politically that Barack Obama is at. Bill Clinton- same place, and
they all emerged, of course, as these stupendous leaders. And so, this
is what happens: after the euphoria of victory, there is disappointment.
But am I disappointed? On some issues, yes. Wall Street- he hasn't done enough.

Three weeks earlier, on the September 8 edition of Anderson Cooper 360[4],
Parker and Spitzer agreed on the Ground Zero mosque issue, stating that
"well-spoken" Iman Feisal Rauf changed few minds with his interview on
King's program that night, and forwarded CNN's charge that Islamophobia
is a growing phenomenon in the United States.

- Matthew Balan is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here[5].

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